Puccoon
Puccoon /pəˈkuːn/ is a common name that refers to any of several plants formerly used by certain Native Americans for dyes.[1] The dyes were made from the plants' roots.
Types
- Hoary puccoon - Lithospermum canescens[3]
- Narrow-leaved puccoon, fringed puccoon - Lithospermum incisum
- Golden puccoon - Lithospermum caroliniense
- Hairy puccoon - Lithospermum carolinense var. croceum
- Red puccoon root, Canada puccoon - Sanguinaria canadensis
- Yellow puccoon - Hydrastis canadensis (also called goldenseal)
gollark: It would be slow and duplicate a *ton* of work which the Java side already has access to.
gollark: You technically *can*, but it's annoying. Especially if you want secure websockets since I think you would have to implement TLS in Lua.
gollark: Tables work that way, but not strings!
gollark: That's... a small fission reactor's worth.
gollark: 4kRF/t is an unreasonably large amount for it to draw, in any case.
See also
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.